The Day That Changed Everything Wasn't 9/11

By Ira Chernus

09/12/06 "TomDispatch.com " -- -- Yes, it changed
everything -- not September 11, 2001, when the Twin
Towers collapsed, but November 9, 1989, when the
Berlin Wall fell and left the U.S. at sea, drifting
without an enemy in a strange new world.

Through four decades of the Cold War, Americans had
been able to feel reasonably united in their
determination to fight evil. And everyone, even
children, knew the name of the evildoers: "the
commies." Within two years after the Wall fell, the
Soviet Union had simply disappeared. In the U.S.,
nobody really knew how to fight evil now, or even who
the evildoers were. The world's sole remaining
superpower was "running out of demons," as Colin
Powell complained.

Amid the great anguish of September 11, 2001, it was
hard to sense the paradoxical but very real feeling of
relief that flooded across the country. After a decade
adrift with no foes to oppose, Americans could sink
back into a comfortingly black-and-white world, neatly
divided into the good guys and the bad guys, the
innocent and the guilty. In the hands of the Bush
administration, "terrorists," modest as their numbers
might have been, turned out to be remarkably able
stand-ins for a whole empire-plus of "commies." They
became our all-purpose symbol for the evil that fills
our waking nightmares.

Today the very word "terrorist" conjures up
anxiety-ridden images worthy of the Cold War era --
images of an unpredictable world always threatening to
spin out of control. As then, so now, sinister evil is
said to lurk everywhere -- even right next door --
always ready to spring upon unsuspecting victims.

Historians, considering the last decades of our
history, are well aware that millions of Americans
didn't need the attacks of 9/11 to fear that their
world was spinning out of control. As the Cold War
waned, profound differences on "values" issues
(previously largely kept under wraps) came out of the
closet. Societal anxiety rose. Many wondered how long
a nation could endure if it had no consensus on "moral
matters" and no obvious authority figures to turn to.
Many feared they would lose their moral anchor in an
increasingly confusing and challenging world.

This was the real terror that the Bush administration
played upon when the Twin Towers fell. It took no time
at all for the President to be right on Manichaean
message: "We've seen that evil is real." "It is enough
to know that evil, like goodness, exists." He did not
have to say the rest explicitly, because (with a sigh
of relief and endless rites of ceremonial mourning)
Americans understood it: Goodness exists here in the
good old USA. How do we know? Because evil itself
attacked us and we are so firmly committed to fighting
it.

Such circular logic fed public discourse from the
springs of a deeply buried unconscious longing for
power, clarity, and innocence. Once again we could
stand tall in the world, the dazzling hyperpower of
hyperpowers. As long as we were fighting evil, we had
to be the good guys. If we weren't so good, why would
we be so determined to fight the supposedly new evil
of global terrorism?

Of course, it worked the other way around, too: The
only way to prove that we were good was by hunting out
and fighting evil. If we were to keep on feeling
certain that we were the good guys, a steady supply of
bad guys was a necessity -- and the post-Cold War
decade just hadn't done its job providing them. So it
could easily seem more appealing to launch a
generational Global War on Terror that would keep the
"terrorists" around permanently. What better way to
keep on proving our virtue than by combating and
containing them forever?

The New Normalcy

The neoconservatives understand all this perfectly
well -- and well before September 11, 2001. For years,
they had dreamed of preserving American virtue (and
American global dominance) by flaunting American
military might. They just needed an ongoing series of
excuses to do the flaunting. The attacks of 9/11 gave
them their chance.

Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and Condoleezza Rice
(all products of the Cold War era) said it clearly in
the weeks following the attack. Their new war would
not be a straightforward World War II-style march to
victory. It would be more like… well, the war they
knew, the Cold War, with its endless string of
conflicts, crises, containments, and battles in the
frontier lands of what used to be called the Third
World. And it would be forever.

As Cheney put it, "There's not going to be an end date
when we're going to say, ‘There, it's all over with.'"
And he classically summed things up this way: "Many of
the steps we have now been forced to take will become
permanent in American life. … I think of it as the new
normalcy.'' The neocons were glad to see the war on
terrorism revive memories of the days when -- they
imagine -- we contained the commies, learned to stop
worrying, and loved the bomb (despite all its terror).


It was a strange love that they remembered so fondly.
Polls made it clear that we never really stopped
worrying then -- and polls make it clear that we still
haven't now. Now, as then, we just bury the terror
ever deeper and console ourselves as best we can with
the mercilessness of our enemies and the relative
safety of our own neck of the woods.

A recent poll tells us that only 14% of Americans feel
safer now than they did five years ago. Seventy-nine
percent expect another attack on U.S. soil within the
next year, and 60% think it's likely in the next few
months. Four out of five say that "we will always have
to live with the threat of terrorism," though only one
in five admits to being "personally very concerned
about an attack" in his or her own area. A Florida
woman captured the prevailing mood when she told a
reporter: "When I stop to think about it, I don't feel
very safe. But then again, on a day-to-day basis, I
feel fine." As Rep. Peter King, chair of the House
Homeland Security Committee, put it: "It's like we
live in two parallel existences."

Those words should sound awfully familiar to anyone
who lived through the Cold War years. The war on
terrorism has revived the Cold War mindset, in which
we are all citizens of a national insecurity state.
The terror of impending annihilation from a vast,
conspiratorial, and evil enemy has again become the
vague backdrop of everyday life. To assure ourselves
of our absolute goodness, we must see the enemy as
absolute evil; not a collection of human beings bent
on harming us, but a network of monsters bent on --
and capable of -- destroying us utterly. In other
words, Cheney's "new normalcy" is but a version of an
older, deeper apocalyptic terror. Every loss -- of a
diplomatic conflict or an economic tussle or a pair of
skyscrapers -- is once again framed as a portent of
looming doom for the nation. Any successful attack
upon us, we are told, could bring down the curtain of
Armageddon.

Here's the irony. Unlike the nuclear-armed Soviet
Union in the Cold War years, terrorists cannot
actually threaten to obliterate our country or destroy
the planet. But each apocalyptic warning of war to the
death by the Bush administration only hastens another
kind of loss -- the loss of the American imperial
power they so prize.

Cornered Empire?

Even if actual extinction doesn't threaten, when it
seems to, a nation, like an animal, is tempted to
fight back with no holds barred. That's the attitude
Bush and the neocons have tried to inculcate since
9/11. It's the only attitude, they insist, that can
save America's military might and moral fiber. Indeed,
for hard-core neocons, the main point of their
global-war-on-terror policies is to revive this very
Cold War mentality.

Yet those policies have obviously backfired terribly.
The war on terrorism was supposed to build a new
American century -- a unipolar world in which the U.S.
would reign supreme. But every day it looks more and
more like the 21st century will be the multipolar
century, with any number of powerful nations and
regional groupings successfully challenging U.S.
economic, diplomatic, and military preeminence.

Bush and his neocon advisors certainly don't bear all
the blame for an American imperial decline. But their
utter misreading of the nature of U.S. military power
and their lack of interest in economic and diplomatic
realities has certainly hastened along a process that,
in some fashion, was bound to happen anyway.

The United States reached the peak of its power in the
late 1940s. The meat-grinder of World War II had
chewed up all the other great powers and their
colonial empires, too. In the ensuing decades, as the
others recovered and once-dominated nations like China
and India broke free and gained traction, the world
moved inevitably toward a multipolar future.

Cold war presidents from Truman to Reagan hastened the
process by building up U.S. allies like Germany and
Japan in order to stave off the evil empire. And they
sometimes even heeded the call of those allies to
refrain from using military force (or too much of it
anyway), lest a global war be triggered. Empowering
our allies, while keeping them militarily subservient,
actually helped them grab a bigger slice of the global
economic pie, encouraging the rise of multipolarism.
Big mistake, the neocons declared as, after 9/11, they
set the Bush administration on an aggressive course of
unilateralism, aiming at their dream of a
New-Rome-style unipolarism.

Looking back, it's easy to see what a big mistake they
made -- even in their own terms. Their unilateralism
and militarism accelerated to near warp speed the
decline of U.S. power and influence around the world.
Every military blow or threatened blow only multiplied
American enemies; every shock-and-awe action only
created more opposition, even from increasingly
standoffish allies. In the years to come, for an
economically weakened "last superpower," there will be
more and more occasions, on more and more fronts, when
the U.S. will meet its match and have to back down.
None of these will spell doom for us. But in context
of the national insecurity state, they're likely to be
framed as apocalyptic defeats, harbingers of the end
time itself, and, above all, good reason to fight back
blindly with all our might.

This is the vicious circle from Hell. The Bush
administration's aggressive policies weaken U.S.
power. Then its officials try to frighten the public
into supporting the very same aggressive policies. We
were stuck in a similar cycle, only half-recognized,
throughout the Cold War years, and there's no end in
sight. So far, it looks like not much has changed at
all since 9/11.

But we don't have to stay stuck. There's nothing
inevitable about history. Some 160 years after the
French Revolution, Chinese Prime Minister Zhou Enlai
was asked how that event had changed the world. "It's
too soon to tell," Zhou replied impishly. Five short
years after 9/11, it's way too soon to tell if the
attacks of that day actually "changed everything," or
if they changed much of anything at all.

Already, there is a growing awareness that the Bush
Global War on Terror is doing more harm than good.
Even from the foreign policy elite we can hear (though
still often faintly) voices saying it's time to call
it off. For now, the talk is narrowly focused on our
imperial well-being -- the weakening of U.S. power and
interests around the world.

Perhaps, as losses mount, Americans will eventually
see the more important truth: Simplistic moralism and
a pervasive fear of apocalyptic disaster weaken our
society here at home. They make every step toward
positive change look like a looming danger and that
plays right into the hands of conservatives who are
dedicated to preventing the change we need so badly.
If the failed war on terror eventually teaches us this
lesson, 9/11 will turn out to be the day that did
indeed change everything

Ira Chernus is Professor of Religious Studies at the
University of Colorado at Boulder. His latest book is
Monsters To Destroy: The Neoconservative War on Terror
and Sin. He can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyright 2006 Ira Chernus / TomDispatch.com

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